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WILL D, MUSE 



Copyrighted 1916 by 

Will D. Muse Publishing Company 

Memphis, Tenn., U. S. A. 



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FIRST EDITION 



JAN ~8 1917 



WILL D. MUSE PUBLISHING COMPANY 

Memphis, Tenn. 



©GI,A4n5n4G 



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To those whom I love and trust and whose faith and 
comradeship has lightened the load and brightened the 
road to the Hills O' Hope: this little volume is 
LOVINGLY DEDICATED 



Introduction. 

EYOND the valley of sorrow and disappoint- 
ment ne the HILLS O'HOPB, sun-kissed and 
glorious, lifting their silent peaks to the very 
gates of our HEAVEN OF DESIHE. 

The road through the valley may he rough and wind- 
ing, and the gray mist of re^fret may fall arounri us, 
but the pathway will lead us on, and up, to the golden 
glory of THE HILLS O'HOPE. and over into that 
mysterious land that lies just heyond — where the heart 
can rest and grieve no more; where eyes are always 
bright with gladness, and where hands are ever busy 
with the endless tasks of love. 

It is LOVE and HOPE and TSUST that weave the 

straws and twigs in'c a nest amonp; the branches of 
the apple tree, where the brown thrush sits and sings. 
It is LOVE and HOPE and TRUST that cement them 
together into a soft swaying basket for the little ones 
to come; and it is LOVE and HOPE and TRUST that 
ply the golden shuttle in the loom of life, weavingi 
together the brittle thread of days into the warp and 
woof of the heart. 

It is HOPE that whispers to us at the dawn of every 
day, with the dew upon the sleeping flowers and the 
sunlight upon the rolling fields. It is TRUST that 
gives us strength, when the day has reached its noon, 
and the burden of labour is heavy upon our shoulders; 
and it is LOVE that waits for us when sunset's crim- 
son tints the HILLS O'HOPE — waits beside the open 
door where the red rose bentis, and the candle gleams 
bright in the window; waits to kiss away the frown 
from a tired brow, ar.d whisper the oM '^-weet story 
into ever-listoning ears, while dear hands clasp other 
hands, as in the soft twilight dear, eager lips find other 
hungry lips to comfort and caress. 

It is ever so. and will always be, as long as life shall 
last. Our eyes are ever looking toward the far-off 
HILLS O'HOPE, and our restless feet are always 
searching for the winding pathway that leads to the 

HOUSE OF LOVE. 




THE HILLS 0' HOPE. 

Say, smile and just be iiappy, with the shdftin' O) 
your load, 
For a shady place is waitin' at the beudin' o' the 
road; 
You may get footsore and weary as the path gleams 
hot and white. 
But there's rest and dreams, aplenty 'neath the cur- 
tains o' the night. 
So just whistle, while you're trampin' for there's lots 
o' fun in hope, 
And it's "ave et vale" old fellow, as you take the 
downward slope. 

You may find folks cold and heartless, as you fight your 
way to fame. 
But don't stop to grieve their friendship if you 
want to play the game; 
Keep on climbin', keep on strivin', keep on singin' 
as you go, 
Keep your eyes always turned upward, for its death 
to look below; 
And be sure to keep on smilin' at your foes, and at 
your friends. 
For there's just one friend worth countin', where 
life's rugged pathway ends. 

It is good to hear the echo of the builder's hammer 
shock. 
It is good to ride the breakers as they dash upon 
the rock; 
It is good to rest, aweary, when the long day's toil is 
done. 
If we know each stroke was honest — be the battle 
lost or won. 
And the greatest compensation — though we may have 
lost the fight, 
Is the smile of eyes that love us where the hearth- 
stone fire burns 'bright. 



THE ONLY ROAD. 

There is just one path that is worth the finding, 

Of all the ways which Fate may lead. 
Through the mist of years, so chill and blinding; 

Only one path that our feet most need; 
Out of the faith to which we are clinging, 

Out of the creeds which our fathers knew; 
Just one hope — while the heart is singing — 

It's the path of love — through the dusk and dew. 

From the fields below, with the south wind blowing, 

To the snow-capped verge of the mountain height, 
There is just one way the heart is knowing. 

As it struggles on through the weary night; 
There is just one road that has its ending, 

Where the heart can rest, and grieve no more; 
It's the road that stops where the rose is bending. 

And Love waits close by the open door. 

From the peopled earth to the gates of Heaven, 

Through the dearth of years that are never kind; 
Through the fire of Fate where the soul is shriven, 

We search for the road we may never find; 
It's the road of Love which is ever turning 

In and out through the drifting years; 
We search and search, while the heart is yearning. 

And tired eyes ache with the bitter tears. 

We may wear the crown which proud Fame places, 

We may spend the gold which our slavery gave; 
But the past will come, with its dead ghost-faces, 

And torture us with the love we crave. 
We may have earth's wealth — all the gold and glory; 

We may walk through halls that are rich and grand; 
But our ears will long for the old, old story, 

While we miss the touch of a vanished hand. 

L' Envoi — 

For, out through the years that are ever thralling, 

And up to the gates of Heaven above; 
There is just one path, that is calling, calling. 

It's the path that leads to the House of Love. 



STILL-BORN. 

What will of God or fancied trick of Fate 

Brings life and death so often side hy side? 

A soul stands close to life's half -open gate, 

And then this soul is launched upon death's tide. 

So, Life and Death are twins within the womb, 
As Death and Life lie, twins, within the tomb. 

The glorious mother, with a yearning heart, 
Waits for the gladness of that wondrous hour 

When in her arms shall rest her counterpart — 
The precious budding of her heart's first flower. 

With heavenly patience doth she look ahead, 
As Death is playing with life's brittle thread. 

All of the joy the long years ever gave, 
All of the pain which she shall ever know. 

All of the darkness of a silent grave, 

She suffers — for this thing she loveth so. 

All of the rapture, all the roseate dreams 
That life doth hold, are hers, alone, it seems. 

But what is it that kissed the eyelids still? 

What froze the breath just warm upon her cheek, 
And her wild heart with vague forebodings fill. 

Until it grows unfeeling, numb and weak? 
What cruel power has chilled those veins of blue. 

And dimmed the light beneath those eyelids, too? 

Oh, cruel Fate! Oh, God, whom men call just! 

Where is blind Justice, that doth measure all? 
Is there but this — "dust unto silent dust?" 

Is this frail life less than a sparrow's faU? 
What compensation for the life she gave? 

What earthly comfort o'er a new-made grave? 

DOWN BY THE GATE. 

The mocking bird sings a song to its lover, 
I'm waiting and watching for you, by the gate; 

The bees have come home from fields of red clover, 
Stars glisten. I listen! Oh! why are you late? 

The lilacs are drinking the dewdrops' moist kisses. 
The breezes are saying, "I know he'll be there;" 

I'm longing. Sweetheart, for your dearest caresses, 
I have twined a red rose in my dark, tangled hair. 

The wind stirs the leaves, the birds are all mating; 

My brown eyes are burning, my arms long for you; 
Oh! why don't you come, I'm lonely with waiting, 

My heart is singing a love-song to you. 



SMILES. 

There's enough of pain and sorrow in this old world, 

don't you know, 
With the years of toil, struggle, greed and gain. 
So start a Joy Tree growing, and say, just let it grow; 
For we always get some sunshine after rain. 
Just try sometimes to smile. 
You can do it — after while. 

There's a lot of people living just because they can 

not die, 
And they nearly always greet you with a frown. 
They could as well be pleasant, and grin some if they'd 

try; 
And a handshake helps a fellow when he's down. 
So, forget yourself, and smile. 
You'll enjoy it — after while. 

Each one must sometimes falter 'neath a heavy load. 

Our lips must taste the wonnwood and the gall; 
But there's always shady places along Life's dusty 
road. 

And it's just a short day's journey, after all. 
So be a sport, and smile. 

It will shorten every mile. 

There are days so hot and dreary that the soul grows 
sick with grief, 
And it seems there's nothing hardly worth the fight; 
But just keep your thoughts from straying in the paths 
of unbelief; 
For God's stars are shining somewhere in the night. 
So take the road and smile. 
Smiles draw interest — after while. 



CONSTANCY. 

We love, and sigh, and go our way. 

With yearning hearts, and eyes tear-wet; 

We vow eternal constancy — 
And yet we go and soon forget! 

Forget our tears 'neath other smiles, 
Forget our grief, forget our pain, 

Forget another's winning wiles, 
And make our vows to love again. 

Forget? Ah! well, perhaps we do, 

The vows, the sighs, the tears; and yet 

Some time, somewhere, 'mid faces new, 
The dream comes back and brings regret. 



AT ONE DAY'S END. 

At last, too soon the lingering day has died, 

And o'er the world, so softly, far and wide, 
The shadows fall. 

The sunset crimson tints the distant west, 
And twilight — silent harbinger of rest — 

Creeps over all. 
Another day forever gone! Dear Heart, 

Nearer, one day, to where our paths must part. 

Another sunset, and the evening star 

Is brightly gleaming, where'er you are; 
While aU alone 

I sit, ahungered for one little touch 
Of your dear fingers that I love so much; 

But they are gone! 
And you're gone, gone with the day that died. 

And I am aU alone, lonely and unsatisfied. 

Ah, can't you feel this longing for you, Dear? 

This want of you; and can't you hear 
Me call your name? 

Can you not feel my hands caress you yet? 
Feel my last kiss? Oh, God! you can't forget. 

Since dear love came. 
You can't forget — although the day is dead — 

My love, my kisses, and the things I said. 



WHEN THE SAND MAN COMES. 

Wl-en I'm tired, you know, and the day slips out 

Thro ' the lonesome fields of night, 
And the stars just wink at me, and the moon 

Comes up so round and white. 

When the fire in the grate bums big and red. 

Then Daddy comes home to stay. 
And he says, as he puts his hand on my head, 

"Have you been a nice man today?" 

When I say, "Yes, sir!" he says, "Tut, tut," 
But he smiles as he rocks and hums. 

Then whispers, "Better get those blue eyes shut, 
Before the old Sand Man comes." 

So he rocks, while I try to count the sheep 

As they gallop across his knee. 
And I count and count till I faU asleep. 

With his strong arms holding me. 



WE MUST GO BACK. 

Good Bys! 

We must go back again, where duty leads, 
Back where the days are gray and drear, 

Back where our paths must part, My Dear, 
Back to a cold world's laws and creeds. 

We must go back. Good bye! 

Good Bye! 

Our joy has reached its end. 
The few short days, which were our own, 

Have passed, the golden sun that shone 
Upon us, now with the shadows blend. 

We must go back. Good bye! 

Good Bye! 

The dream Is done; and we must pay 
The price for such a wondrous bliss. 

The voiceless joy of lips that cUng and kiss. 
Fate hath decreed; there is no other way. 

We must go back. Good bye! 

Good Bye! 

And may God always bless you. Dear, 
Guarding your steps, no matter where you go, 

Keeping you pure; because I love you so, 
Then when I call, I know that you will hear. 

But for awhile, we must go back. 



THE FRIENDLY ROAD. 

(In Memory of David Grayson.) 
Comrade, we are listening all along life's way. 

For the happy echo of your cheery voice; 
Falling soft as dew-drops at the close of day. 

And each little whisper makes our hearts rejoice; 
Sundown land before us, on the open road; 

Comradeship like yours lightens every load. 

Big, broad fields of sunshine, mixed with clover-bloom, 
Daisies nodding "Howdy" to the passing breeze; 

Summer slipping threads of gold in her whirring loom, 
Orioles are singing in the apple trees; 

Twilight shadows falling, hear the whip-poor-will 
Softly, sweetly calling, just beyond the hill. 

life has many sorrows, but a night's repose 
Often makes us hungry for the day again; 

Though the thorns may sting us, yet we love the rose, 
And we know that sunshine always follows rain; 

life will soon be over, God will take our load 
When we reach the ending of The Friendly Road. 



WHEN THE NAG GOES LAME. 

A little bit o' simshine and a little bit o' shade; 
A little bit o' puffin' on the uphill grade; 
A little bit o' patience with things that can't be cured, 
And a Mttle bit o' grinnin' o'er things to be endured — 
For the days are ne'er so gloomy but they might be 

worse, 
And you needn't start to crying 'till you see the hearse, 

A little bit o' playin' as you plod along, 
And a little bit o' prayin' — a little snatch o' song; 
A little bit o' pilin' up a kiud-word claim, 
And a little bit o' smilin' when the nag goes lame — 
For there's many a happy couple never rode a one- 
horse shay. 
But walked the road together, on their wedding day. 

A little bit o' "sandin' " on a long, slick track; 
A little bit o' backbone up and down your back; 
A little bit o' welcome, and your door flung wide, 
Just to make your neighbors happy ii" you just half 

tried — 
For each day is mighty fleeting and your stay is mighty 

brief. 
And the devil's always grinnin' at your unbelief. 



TO MARGARET. 

Merry Little Sunshine, with your eyes of blue! 

V/ondcr how the angels ever let you through 
Heaven's gates of jasper? They must have been asleep, 

And each night the dew-drops are the tears they 
weep. 

All the stars are candles which they bum at night, 
Searching Heaven for you, since you took your 
flight; 

And they wander, weeping, o'er the milky way. 
Their lone vigil keeping, every night and day. 

Summer's ever-fleeting days are never long, 
And the heart is aching underneath its song. 

Close my arms enfold you — head of burnished gold — 
But they cannot hold you when the years grow old. 

Sing a song of summer, dimpled chin and cheek, 
Where the smiles and roses play at 'hide-and-seek.' 

Merry Little Sunshine, when God calls for you, 
Smile up at the angels; they will let you through. 



PARTING. 

When you are gone; 

A thousand thoughts will come to torture me, 
Of things my aching heart would tell to you; 

A thousand words that struggle to be free, 
And yet, today, I caimot say but few — 

For you are here. 

When you are gone! 

My empty arms will ache to hold 
You close against my lonely orphaned heart; 

My lips, now silent, will grow overbold, 
And taunting memories make my pulses start — 

When you are gone! 

While you are here! 

I can but sit and look into your eyes 
That hold the magic of each joy I feel. 

And yet my soul will cry for yovir replies 
Tonight, when all alone, I humbly kneel — 

And you are gone! 

When you are gone! 

I will not count the hours but by the beat 
Of my sad heart, hungry to have you near, 

And hear again your precious lips repeat 
The whispered love words that I long to hear — 

When you are gone! 



IF GOD KNEW. 

Alone! I wonder if God ever knew 

The dull, dead ache that comes with loneliness? 
The pain that grips me in this want of you. 

Dry lips made dumb by pitiless distress. 

Alone! Ah! God must surely know. 

Or else there is no kindly God up there, 

Where stars, like distant fire-flies glow. 
No God — then there can be no prayer. 

Alone, my hungry heart athirst again 
Just for the cooling waters of your love. 

Starved! Like the flowers for the summer rain 
That falls, refreshing, from the skies above. 

Alone! Oh, God, if faith is not a lie, 

Let me reach out across the weary years 

To find you, hold you, e'er my fond hopes die 
And I walk, blinded by a million tears. 



OUR LITTLE HOUSE. 

A little house — your house and mine; 

Low hanging eaves, close clinging vine, 
And flowers, too. 

One little door to open wide 
Enough for two to pass inside. 

Just me — and you. 

One pathway where red roses blow, 
One window where you'd sit and sew, 

And watch for me. 

One open Are, one vacant seat, 

Kept just for me, beside you. Sweet, 
Where none could see. 

One little garden, hid from view, 

Filled with God's love, and sunshine, too — 
Just yours, and mine. 

One little world of love and bliss, 
A low, glad laugh, a welcome kiss. 

While blue eyes shine. 

A little house — our house, Dear Heart — 
Where homeing steps make pulses start, 

And fill the eyes 

With eager welcome; and inside 

A pair of arms to open wide — 
My paradise. 



THE OLD, OLD STORY. 

I wonder, sometimes, if the heart can be human 
That never succumbed to the charms of a woman. 
For even old Adam in the Garden of Eden 
Was tempted by Eve while his snakes he was feedin'. 

The man must, indeed, have very poor digestion 
Who never "gets sweet" on the article in question; 
For the world is the same, all over and over. 
The bees will steal sweets from the broad fields of 
clover. 

A man must love, and, though she don't show it, 
Woman must be loved, and cannot outgrow it; 
Her hair may turn gray and Time steal her roses, 
But she likes to be kissed just below where her nose is. 

'Tis the same fairy tale, a tale sweet and olden. 
Of hearts that are young and days that are golden; 
And though hearts grow old and clouds hang above us. 
We always want woman to worry and love us. 



YOUR BEAUTIFUL ARMS. 

Alone tonight — and I want you only — 

My heart is hungry for just its own; 
With the ending day, so void and lonely, 

There is just one joy that could atone 
For the nameless ache which my soul is feeling, 

And the empty night with its wild alarms; 
It would be to feel around me stealing, 

Again, those beautiful, twining arms. 

The tasks are done! Gray twilight falling, 

Brings a sting to the eyes, tear-wet; 
As I seem to hear you calling, calling, 

The old sweet names that I can't forget. 
The mating bird to its home is winging, 

Where waiting love its chill heart warms; 
I yearn for your red lips ever clinging, 

And a haven of rest in your beautiful arms. 

Oh! the days are hard, and the days are weary, 

'Till I come, again, in the dusk and dew; 
And the dragging nights are black and dreary. 

While my soul cries out its want of you. 
But when I come in the dim tomorrow, 

To find you burdened with olden charms, 
I will then forget all the pain and sorrow. 

In the wild, glad joy of your beautiful arms. 

COMMUNION. 

I do not walk alone! 

I seem to find you ever by my side. 
When hands grow tired, and lips are dumb 

With pain, when hope has almost died. 
When kindly shadows veil the aching eyes. 

And gentle breezes cool the fevered brow, 
I find you near. 

I cannot walk alone! 

The thread of Fate has led me from afar, 
Out of the wreck of life's dead past; 

Thro' all the empty years to where you are. 
Until I find no solace, or content 

Apart from you, and ever do I feel 
Tour presence. Dear. 

I would not walk alone! 

I only ask, that in the weaving of the future days, 
The sunshine of your face may be a part 

Of every moment, and your lips to praise 
Me for the good which I may do. 

Until we sit beside a mouldering hearth 
When all is done. 



HEART HUNGER. 

The twilight gathers thick and fast, 

The sunset skies are gray; 
The sea gulls flutter 'round the mast, 

And in the glittering spray; 
The night-birds call; while in the sky 

The stars gleam, one by one; 
Upon the bay the shadows lie — 

The weary day is done. 

Across the water gleams the moon, 

A path of burnished gold; 
And o'er the world the somber night 

Its robes of silence fold. 
Oh, star-lit night! Oh! vanished past! 

Bring back the wcndrous blisi. 
Of other days. Of tw^ining arms — 

A smile, a word, a kiss. 

Bring back the treasure that is lost, 

The ships put out to sea. 
The turquoise blue of smiling eyes; 

Oh! bring again to me 
The rose red lips, which once did give 

A draught of richest wine. 
A heart so full of passion's fire, 

A love so wholly mine. 

Sweetheart, I'm waiting for you now, 

I'm hungry for your kiss; 
So hungry for your clear, dear, arms. 

It's You — ^just You — I miss. 
The rose has faded in my hand, 

Its petals droop and fall. 
Ah, life is but a game of chance — 

We win or lose it all! 

L: Envoi. 

What matters where the lost ships port. 

Or where the south wind blows? 
My love is living with the stars; 

Your love died with the rose. 



TANGLED DREAMS. 

Alone, again, with just my thoughts of you, 

Tired, empty hands and aching eyes; 
Alone, and wondering if you only knew, 

Would you be kind or wise? 
Would you be wise and stay your words of cheer, 

Or kind and whisper, low, "I love you, Dear." 

The winter skies are gray, and in the west 
The cloud-isles gleam, like burnished gold; 

Beyond them lies, somewhere, the land of rest. 
Where Heaven's pearly gates unfold: 

The dark comes down, and faint the star-light gleams, 
And I'm alone, with just my tangled dreams. 

Alone with just my dreams — Ah! if you knew 

How hard it seems, hard and imreal. 
That I'm so near and yet so far away from you; 

So very close, sometimes, I almost feel 
The magic of your touch, your laugh, your song, 

And, yet, too far to reach you through my whole life 
long. 

Alone! Oh, God! I wonder if you know 

Just what it means to miss 
The touch of hands within the firelight's glow, 

And eager lips held up to kiss? 
Oh! do you understand, or do you care? 

Hope, love and trust are mingled with my prayer. 

A WANDERER. 

I've been waiting, so eager, so hungry to roam 
'Neath the stars, with their heavenly light; 

No breast for a pillow, no arms for a home, 
I long for the uplands tonight — 

With a gleam of the road through the dusk and the 
dew. 
And a dream of the joys which my forefathers knew. 

There's many a cottage I pass, by the way, 

Where the light of a candle I see 
Gleaming out through the dark, some wanderer to stay; 

But there's never one burning for me — 
So my eyes look ahead to a bend in the road. 

As I swing up my pack, with the heft of ths load. 

The smell of the grasses, the light of the moon. 

And the call of a quail from the hill. 
Bring thoughts of the days that vanished too soon, 

A promise which Fate could not fill; 
But I smile back at Fate, as I drink the last glass, 

With an "Ave Et Vale" to each cottage I pass. 



IF YOU HAD KNOWN. 

If you had dreamed, 

That my heart was aching for just a sign, 
A word, a look from your eyes to mine; 

That the day was fruitless, and dull and drear. 
Because I called and you did not hear; 

Would you have thought the chance worth while 
To make life glad with your old-time smile? 

If you had dreamed! 

If you had thought. 

When you spoke to me in a bitter strain, 
That my body would suffer a nameless pain. 

When you censured me for things untrue, 
Though my eyes smiled up through the tears at you; 

Had you blamed me less — been satisfied — 
E'er Ups were closed, and the day had died? 

If you had thought! 

If you had known, 

That, of all the world we know and see. 
You are the best of it all to me; 

That the touch of your hand, the joy of your smile. 
Is all that makes each day worth while; 

Would you have given me more or less 
Of the love I crave, and forgiveness? 

If you had known? 



THAT OTHER LAND. 

I wonder if there is a land, somewhere. 
Where all of youth's dreams come true? 

A land with valleys of rolling green, 
A land with its skies so blue? 

Do you think there is ever a place like this, 

Where our hearts can treasure the joys they miss? 

I wonder if there is a soothing balm? 

To cure all the hurts we know? 
Or the wonderful joy of a quiet calm. 

When the tempest has ceased to blow? 
Do you think, in that land, the sunset gleams 

Will find us counting, again, our dreams? 

Will we find over there, as we used to do. 

The joys of a childhood past? 
The "Calico Dog" and "Little Boy Blue," 

V/ill we get them all back at last? 
Will we have all of this in that wonderful land. 

And the dear, dear mothers who understand? 



THE RIVER. 

Sad hearts grow weary of waiting in vain 
The coming of Love's ships out of the west; 

Hands that have reached after life's golden grain 
Tire of the struggle and fold over the breast; 

Men come and are gone! 
But my waters flow on; 

I'm the river, you know, and I never rest. 

Sometimes life's morning is scarcely at dawn 
When the wee baby fingers get stiffened and cold, 

While the eyelids — soft curtains — are tremblingly 
drawn 
Over eyes which a vision of Heaven did hold; 

Just an hour of bliss, 
Just one baby kiss — 

But my work is not finished, so I must go on. 

Sometimes life's rich morning drifts on to the night. 
And the bright star of hope flashes out from the 
sky; 

The rare bloom of beauty has suffered no blight. 
Though the flowers of life bloom only to die; 

Life's twilight creeps up. 
As they empty the cup — 

But I must go on, while the weary winds sigh. 

'Tis ever and ever the same story told. 
Though new are the ears that listen to hear; 

The story of waiting 'till young hearts are old. 
The story of life, of hope and of fear; 

They watch and they wait, 
As they swing on Life's gate — 

While I journey onward, year after year. 



OCTOBER. 

The summer days have vanished, and the fields 

Grow sear and brown; 

While from the town 
The tall church steeples shine, like burnished shields. 

The fields of corn wave many a yeUow leaf, 

While from a rail 

I hear a quail 
Calling his mate — a heart-cry full of grief. 

The misty haze that hovers in the air. 

The sheep's faint bleat — 

The echo of some sweet 
Old song that once was new — when life was fair. 



I MISS YOU SO. 

I miss you so! sometimes 

When weighty problems ves and fret 
My mind, and hands grow tired 

Of reaching for things they never get, 
And my dry eyes are hot with unshed tears — 

I miss you so! 

I miss you so! sometimes 

When at the ending of the day, 
As twilight falls, I seem to catch 

The scent of roses from an old, dead May, 
And seem to hold, again, your hand — 

I miss you so ! 

I miss you so! sometimes 

V/hen I awaken from some fitful dream 
Wherein you come, as iu tlie long ago, 

Just mine, alone, and when I seem 
To feel your lips again; and then — 

I miss you so! 

I miss you so! sometimes, 

And all of life seems want and pain, 
While in the turmoil and the strife 

I try to pray for your dear arias again 
To hold me, as no other's can — 

I miss you so! 

I want you so! sometimes 

That nothing else seems worth the while; 
I long so for your dear, dear, clinging lips. 

Your gentle eyes and that bewitching smile 
They used to hold, before I came, 

To miss and want you so! 

FAITH. 

I cannot see you when each newborn day 
Sheds golden glory over earth and sky; 

But I can hear your dear lips kindly say, 

"I love you. Dear!" as night winds softly sigh. 

I cannot reach my hand and find you there. 
When all the sunshine of the day has died; 

But still I know I have your daily prayer, 
Breathed out in love, and I am satisfied. 

I cannot hear the music of your voice, 
I cannot look into your eyes and smile; 

I wait, alone, and have no other choice, 
But this I Imow, I'll see you after while. 



A PRESENT TO MOTHER. 

When you're spending your money in bunches, you 
know, 
To give your best girl a box at the show; 
When you're straining your credit to keep up the pace. 

Aye! selling your soul for the price of a place; 
When you're sending rare gifts, with much Christmas 
joy. 
Don't forget your dear, old mother, my boy! 

It may be exciting to go the mad gait; 

It may seem a joke to tamper with Fate; 
It may swell your pride to bs tonsted and dined, 

To lean o'er bare shoulders — touch lips that are 
wined; 
But, boys, there is something far sweeter than this: 

The face of your mother held up for a kiss. 

Perhaps you won't see her when Christmas gets here. 
The mother who sheltered you, year after year; 

Perhaps you can't hold that gray head to your breast — 
The one in the whole world who loves you tlie best; 

But, boys, when you're buying your presents so gay. 
Just send one to mother — you'll be thankful some 
day. 

You may give costly dinners to those in your set; 

You may beg to buy friendship — then pray to forget; 
You may get hearty handshakes and greetings galore, 

With pink-tinted notes from the one you adore! 
But the missive of thanks that will fill you with joy. 

Is dear, patient mother's "God Bless You, My Boy." 



"AVE ET VALE." 

"Ave," my friend, the morn of life is beaming. 
The bud of hope is bursting into bloom; 

The snowy sails are on the ocean gleaming. 
But soon, they ride into the western gloom. 

"Vale," my friend, life's day is slowly ending, 
And death's twilight doth gather thick and fast; 

Out o'er the tide our ships are homeward tending. 
And tattered sails hang to a shattered mast. 



THE LAW. 

The story of Martha and Mary is old 

As the oldest fable our lips repeat, 
How Martha toiled, and bought and sold, 

While Mary sat at the Master's feet; 
And though the world has changed, we know 

The law is now, as the law was then — 
The sons of Martha, they plant and sow. 

While the sons of Mary are idle men. 

The wheels of commerce turn the same 

Slow and tireless, year after year, 
And the mill of Fate breaks, without shame. 

Those who tread it ,with many a tear; 
And the songs we hear, through the lonesome night, 

Are Martha's sons, in their wanton glee; 
They curse and kill, where the lights are white, 

'Till their eyes are blurred and they cannot see. 

While the sons of Mary, on bended knee. 

Pray for them, that they may not fall 
Into the pits which they cannot see; 

Pray, with their faces against the wall; 
Pray to God, in their mute despair. 

For the sons of Martha, who never heed 
The voice of Conscience, which cries, "Beware!" 

Sut who curse, and die in their drunken greed. 

WHIP-POOR-WILL. 

Evening shades are falling, falling, thick and fast. 
Creeping o'er the meadow, climbing up the hill; 

And I hear a plaintive calling, low, at last. 

Calling from the woodland, where all is dark and 
still: 

' ' Whip-poor-will ! Whip-poor-will ! ' ' 
Somewhere it is calling "Whip-poor-will." 

The nightingale is singing, singing clear and sweet, 
Singing to its sweetheart, singing to the stars; 

While there comes a ringing, from where the shadows 
meet, 
A dear call that is winging from the pasture bars: 

"Whip-poor-will! Whip-poor-will! ' ' 

Sweetheart, I am yearning, yearning for you still. 
Longing for your kisses, pure as stars above; 

While my eyes are burning as with tears they fill, 

Don't you hear me calling for you. Love? 

"Whip-poor-will! Whip-poor-will!" 
Waiting for your answer, "Whip-poor-will." 



A SUNNY LITTLE FELLOW. 

There's a sunny little fellow living with us now, you 

know, 
Eyes as blue as skies in summer, v/hen the breezes 

gently blow, 
Always happy as a sunbeam dancing on the garden wall, 
Laughing through the falling tear-drops — if he has to 

cry at all. 

Never selfish with his kisses, gives them to you with a 
grin. 
Pokes his dirty mouth up to you, with the dimples 
stickin' in 
Both his cheeks; and then his fingers slighly steal 
around your neck. 
Leaving " 'lasses" on your collar where there 'd 
never been a speck. 

Awful jolly, little fellow, with his hair like autumn 
gold. 
And a heart that's just as tender as his big blue eyes 
are bold. 
Guess he won't wear out his welcome if he thinks it 
best to stay! 
And — Oh, God! It would be lonesome, if he ever went 
away. 



THE LONELY HEARTH. 

Twilight! 

And in the western sky 
The fading crimson glow. 

Like a sweet memory 
Of sunset, that is prone to die. 

Twilight — and labors done! 

Lamplight! 

And softly through the night 
A vibrant stillness falls 

Like to the drifting leaves. 
An hour, just for respite. 

Lamplight — and hopes! 

Firelight ! 

The crimson in the sky 
Is gone; the sputtering wick 

Has burned down to the end. 
Upon the hearth the red coals die. 

Firelight — and loneliness! 



niGH¥/AYS AND HEDGES. 

I love the steaming city, with its rumbling roll of 

strife; 
I love its shimmering highways, with their pulsing 

veins of life; 
There's a vicious joy in fighting where the arm of 

might is right, 
But we find God in the country, where a million stars 

gleam white. 

Where the rustling leaves are flaunting all of Autumn's 
garnered gold. 

And the sumac steals the crimson that the sunset ban- 
ners hold; 

While the white cloud-isles are floating out beyond aa 
opal sea. 

And the flowers— God's fragrant footprints— blossom 
there for you and me. 

There is sorrow in the city, caged behind its walls of 

stone; 
There are paths of pain and darkness which the world 

has never known; 
But there's gladness in the country, where the days are 

fuU of Ught, 
And God walks along its byways, and the stars gleam 

still and white. 



THE COMING. 

Love does not come with honeyed words of praise 
To soothe the ear or blind our aching eyes; 

But at the ending of long, weary days, 
With hands whose touch comforts and satisfies. 

True Love comes not with glory, pomp or pride; 
It comes at twilight and the quiet fireside. 

Love does not come when all the world seems bright, 
And Fortune smiles upon us, day by day; 

But when the path seems darker than the night. 
And trembling lips at last refuse to pray. 

True Love comes not when we are satisfied. 
It comes — thank God! — when every hope has died. 

Love comes not when the laurel wreath of fame 
Falls on our brow, and God seems sood and just; 

But when we wear the crimson robe of shame. 
And even God seems faithless to his trust. 

True Love come not when Her. von is ours to be; 
It comes — at last! — ^with sad Gethsemanc, 



DESOLATION. 

There seems no surcease from the weary days 

That come, with creeping steps, or in the ways 

That each of us must go, and, when the night 

Descends, a nameless fear steals in to blight 

The precious dreams which memory, lingering, leaves. 

And all alone my heart, o'erburdened, grieves. 

There is no way, no path that seemeth best; 
There is no toil, no task which bringeth rest, 
Or lulls to sleep the restless yearning in my heart 
For you — always for you — no matter where thou art. 
The cup I drink, the cup of countless days, like gall, 
I drink alone, though somewhere you may call. 

There seems to be no blessings that may come, 
No answered prayer from eager lips, half dumb 
With longing for the soft caress 
Of your dear lips, that always soothe and bless; 
The days are empty, and the nights are drear. 
Because my aching arms doth never find you, Dear. 

There are no conquests, tho' with victory bought, 
There are no bonds within time's forges wrought, 
There is no stretch of slowly drifting years, 
No dreamless sleep, no wash of bitter tears, 
That compensates for all the need of you. 
Or mixes nectar with life's cup of rue. 



THE LAND OF REGRET. 

There's a land somewhere that we never forget, 
Through the toil and heat of the years. 

And the name of this land is the Land of Begret, 
Through which flows the Eiver of Tears. 

All the hunger we've felt, all the sorrow we've known. 
All the longing, the heart-aches and pain, 

All the bloom and the blight of the past we have sown, 
All the prayers we have uttered in vain. 

In the Land of Regret, we watch and we wait 

For the sight of a sail in the west, 
But bloom turns to blight, as day does to night, 

And we nurse the dull ache in the breast. 

In the Land of Regret, we can never forget. 
And our hearts never cease to complain; 

But God sends the tears through the slow drifting years. 
Like the fall of the dew and the rain. 



IF YOU'D STAYED. 

How I miss you every day 

Since you went away from me, 
Miss you more than words can say; 

Just as lonesome as can be 
Or lonesomer — p'raps, wlio knows? 

When the dewdrops kiss the rose, 
And the crickets in the grass 

Chirrup! so sassy, goodness knows! 

How I miss you when I come 

Home at night and find you gone. 
Always makes the hot tears come; 

And, again, at early dawn. 
Guess it's then I miss you some; 

No "Good mornin' " kiss for mine. 
While a pair of arms slip up 

'Round my neck and blue eyes shine. 

Here's your book of Riley rhymes, 

Soiled and thumbmarked; here a tear 
Where you've turned a thousand times. 

Saying, "Daddy, read The Bear" 
Or "The Squirt Gun Uncle Made," 

Or ' ' The Circus Day Parade. ' ' 
Oh! I'd read them o'er and o'er. 

Little boy, if you had stayed. 



LITTLE FRIEND. 

Tangled curls and big brown eyes, 
Innocent, yet worldly wise; 

God's own smile upon your lips, 
Happy to your finger-tips; 

Skies would never be so blue, 
Only for such tots as you. 

Little man of winning grace. 
Love and laughter in your face; 

Baby speech and toddling feet, 
Words half spoken, shy and sweet; 

Little friend, so staunch and true, 
God is good to me, and you. 

Summer flowers bloom and blow 
O'er the way your feet must go; 

'Till the years stretch out, afar, 
Where the hills of manhood are; 

And let's hope that God will be 
Always good to you and me. 




^■"TilElftt: 



FIDDLER, WHAT DO WE PAY? 

Out where the white lights gleam and glare, 
Out where the great throngs pass, 

Out where the Devil has set his snare 
Deep in the brimming glass — 

There where we dance till the break of day. 
Oh, Fiddler, what do we pay? 

What is your toll for the time you spend. 
And the rollicking music you make? 

What do you charge at a short life's end 
For the thousands of hearts you break? 

What will you claim, in the dawn, cold gray? 
Oh, Fiddler, what must we pay? 

Is it the best which life has kept 

Out of its garnered youth, 
Watered by tears sad eyes have wept 

To blind us against the truth? 
Will you take all we have prayed for? Say, 

Oh, Fiddler, what shall we pay? 

Hands that reach out to the twilight west, 

Lips that are numb with pain; 
Ashes of hope, that was life's own best, 

Tears like the falling rain. 
Death, we wait in the dawn, cold gray. 

Oh, Fiddler, come take your pay. 



DESERT SONG. 

The hot sun beats on the desert sands, 
An eagle drifts in the azure sky. 

Far from his nest in foreign lands. 
Where the snow-capped peaks repeat his cry. 

The red sun gleams and the camels -whine. 
My arms are empty — oh, Love of mine! 

Darkness at last; the white stars glow. 
The Garden of Allah, how still and wide; 
Each star a memory of long a?o, 
E'er life was weary and hope had died. 
How dear wciilcl the Garden of Allah be. 
If you were watching the stars with me. 

Kneeling, I pray till the purple dawn 
Bathes the east in her misty light; 

Till restless night her tents has drawn, 
And chased the stars from their dizzy height. 

Still the red sun gleams, and the camels whine! 
My arms are empty — oh, Love of mine! 



THE CUP OF TIME. 
The wine of life grows stale, within the cup of time. 
We count, with dimmed eyes, the milestones as they 
pass; 
Each day seems like a sluggard loitering on the way, 
While the sands slip slowly through the clouded 
glass. 
We raise the cup and drink, though naught is left but 
dregs. 
Ah, well! Why not? What boots it, to him who only 
begs? 
The first full draught we took, when pulsing life was 
young, 
Filled youth's hot veins with fire and brought the 
golden light 
Of God's own glory; but too soon its mystic magic 
died, 
Leaving only hunger, and the heavy gloom of night. 
Alas! Youth always holds the brimming cup too long. 
For soon or late our comrades tire of jest and song. 
Just like a ship that labours upon a hell-black sea. 
Where angry breakers crush it until its timbers 
groan, 
We see a Ught, and, listening, hear a faint call la the 
dark. 
A moment's hope; then silence — and we pass on 
alone. 
A harbor light, far-reaching, a boom of signal gun. 
Another wreck! God pity! — a battle lost or won. 
The sages say that God is wise, and good, and full of 
love. 
That He will note, with mercy, the crippled spar- 
row's fall; 
They say that somewhere far beyond the misty moun- 
tain tops. 
Is rest and sweet forgetfulness; that death don't 
end it all. 
Somewhere, they say — far, far beyond the sunset's 
purple glow — 
We shall forget, in dreamless sleep, the sorrows that 
we know. 
But what have they to guide them, except their 
flimsy faith, 
Which leaves no word or sign post beyond the silent 
grave. 
We swing, like little children, always on Death's loose 
gate. 
While the barren years refuse us the crumbs of joy 
we crave; 
But we must drink the cup of life down to the bitter 
dregs. 
Ah, well! Why not, what boots it to him who only 
begs? 



WHEN I'M A MAN LIKE DAD. 

"Boys will be boys," ma says; an' 'en 

She "shoos" her aprun at the ole black hen 
At comes er boverin' roun' an' in the way, 

An' has to be skeert out most every day; 
Ma says she's 'ist 'bout as worrisome as boys 

Only she 'ist don't make such orful noise. 
She says — ma does — 'at boys air worser'n gurls 

'Cause gurls is always bizzy makin' curls 
Upon they heads, an' ruffles on they clo's; 

An' other foolishness, but, gee! I knows 
'At they air not so awful good — 

Cause I don't dast do things et sister would. 

'Cause sister she will say, "Tom did" 

When ma says, ' ' Susie, who tuck off this lid 
Off 'en the jam jar" — smilin' jest as sweet; 

I wouldn't be thet big'er coward if I'd eat 
Es much es her; but then gurls will be gurls — 

They caint teU stories with them purty curls. 
Gee! but I hate er coward; say, don't you? 

En the times I've got 'er lickin' ain't no few 
'Cause I jumped on fellers bigger 'n me 

Who walloped me until I couldn't see 
Fer dirt and dust 'at wus packed in my eyes; 

But when you slap a gurl, why, she 'ist cries, 

An' says, "You mean old thing, you horrid wretch," 

An' nen she runs so fast you couldn't ketch 
Her, en tells all sorts uv tales to ma, 

An' nen at nite ma tells 'em all to pa. 
An' pa he 'ist sets an' smokes an' thinks. 

An' gives his big gray eyes sum awful winks — 
An' nen he says, " 'Fore you have said your prayers 

I want to see you, son, upstairs. ' ' 
An' nen I know, by jinks, there'll be sum fun, 

'Cause it's a cinch, when Pa he caUs me son; 
But shucks! 'tain't no use to beg er kick, 

Fer I wouldn't be like sis en play off sick. 

But you 'ist wait 'till I'm a grate big man 

An' have a lot uv kids — you bet I'll tan 
Their little hides, when I cum home frum town; 

You bet'cher boots, till they 'ist caint set down; 
An' make 'em go to bed 'fore it is nite, 

Yes, sir; right in the dark 'thout nairy a lite. 
An' when they ma says, "Pa, please don't," an' 'gins 
to cry, 

I'll frown an say, "Who's runnin' this joint, you 
or I?" 
An' nen I'll read a while an' maybe go 

Off uptown; to see a picture show; 
You bet'cher! them's the stunts I'll pull when I am 
grown 

An' have a dozen children uv my own. 



A FLOWER FOR MOTHER. 

(Dedicated to Mother's Day.) 
Boys, you've got a mother who awaits somewhere to- 
day. 
Her toil-worn hands are weary, those hands you often 
miss. 
Maybe she's watching for you in a cottage far away, 

Or maybe she is waiting, in a better land than this. 
So, boys, just wear a flower, for dear old mother's sake, 
For she never will forsake you, no matter what the 
stake. 

Remember, boys, how often in the days that used to be, 
She cured the childish heartaches and sorrows that 
you knew, 
And now she's sadly watching, through eyes that 
dimly see. 
For a glimpse at memory's picture which her dear 
love paints of you. 
So, boys, in sacred memory of that dear old snowy 
head: 
A red rose if she's living; a white one if she's dead. 

The world is big and noisy, and the pace is fast and 
hot. 
You have gotten cold and careless and hardened in 
the mill; 
But your mother — she is praying, and she forgets you 
not, 
For to her (and Heaven bless her) you are just her 
baby still. 
So, boys, remember mother, no matter where she be, 
The red rose for affection; the white for memory. 

TOIL AND REST. 

Sometimes the day's long toil 
Seems naught; the way seems bright, 

For through the travail and turmoil 
The memory of night, 

With soft, cool shadows, and the dew, 
St-^als over me; and once again 

Just love, and rest — and You. 

And then I want you so! 

And seek to find 
You in the surging traffic, to and fro; 

Sometimes my busy mind 
Grows weary with the pain. 

And then my tired eyes get blind 
With burning tears again. 



WHEN THE WELL RUNS DRY. 

There is something that's uncanny in our greed for 
gold, 
And youth has fleeting fancies that are vain; 
But dim eyes oft see visions, when the heart grows old, 
While hands reach out, in darkness, for life's joys 
again. 
We can't recall the pleasures which our youth 
passed by, 
For "we never miss the water 'till the well runs 
dry." 

We never miss the flowers 'till the white sno-ws fall 

Upon their velvet petals as they fade and die; 
We never miss the sunshine 'till the darkness covers all, 
And the stars gleam like diamonds in the twilight 
Bky. 
Our hungry hearts so seldom have that for which they 
sigh. 
And "we never miss the water 'till the well runs 
dry. ' ' 

We never miss our loved ones 'till the hand of Death 

Shuts, with icy fingers, the eyes so full of pain; 
We would give all worldly treasures to recall one fleet- 
ing breath, 
But a silent mound out yonder is all our earthly gain. 
We can only plead, like children, to the Throne on 
High, 
For "we never miss the water 'till the well runs 
dry." 



HOPES. 

Sometimes the day seems long and drear, 
And the way so rough and steep; 

And the night brings not on its silken wings 
The wonderful balm of sleep. 

Sometimes life's toil seems fruitless. 
And my tired eyes fill with tears. 

As truant memory strays, again. 
Back o'er the stretch of years. 

For the day oft leaves, with the waking night, 

The touch of a deep regret; 
And the words we say, as we kneel to pray. 

Are the hopes that we can't forget. 



SECUNDUM ARTEM. 

Like the flashing of a sunbeam o'er the rosy cheek of 
day, 
Like the fading of the sunset from the cloud-isles of 
the west, 
Like the shooting of a meteor, downward, through the 
milky way. 
Is the passing of man's body to its everlasting rest. 

Just a little day of laughter, just a little night of tears, 
Just a gleam of joy or sorrow from the mirrored face 
of time, 
Just a pathway through the darkness, bordered by life's 
hopes and fears, 
'Till it leads us to the swinging gates of eternity sub- 
lime. 

Like a white-winged bird at evening, drifting close 
above the wave 
For a moment, then drops downward to the waters, 
blue and deep; 
So, man lingers, for a little while, above the open 
grave. 
Then his eyelids close forever in death's long and 
dreamless sleep. 

THE FINISHED DAY. 

Morning! 

And the welcome burst of azure dawn, 
Spreading across the waiting earth and sky; 

Soft, restless winds that fan the silent trees 
And breathe upon the sleeping flowers — and sigh — 

Morning! And the eagerness 
Of life and love that always seem to bless. 

Noon; 

And the Half -Way house of Life, 
Where, in the glare of blinding, beating sun 

We find a precious moment of respite 
To help us fight until the day is done. 

Life's ripest fruit hangs low beside the way, 
If we but find it e'er the close of day. 

Night! 

And the far, distant gleam 
Of stars that shine upon the ending day, 

Tired, empty hands clasped close in mute distress. 
Lips, dumb with pain too long to even pray — 

Night! And the mockery of a voice we knew 
When first the sunbeams kissed the sparkling dew. 



IN VAIN. 

Alone tonight! Although a thousand faces 
Look into mine, along the busy street, 

While still I search, in all deserted places, 
For a dear face I know I shall not meet. 

Alone tonight! Now that the day is over. 
There seems to be no quiet place to rest, 

Altho the bee is home from fields of clover, 
Altho the night-bird finds a comrade breast. 

Alone tonight! The moonlight, softly falling, 
Lights up a path my wandering feet would go, 

Where, in my dreams, I hear your dear voice calling, 
And where you sit within the fire's red glow. 

Alone tonight! I wonder if my yearning 

Reaches your heart, through all the miles of space? 

And if your eyes with lonely tears are burning. 
Like those that find their way across my face? 

Alone tonight! So very tired and lonely. 
My whole life barren for the want of you. 

Of all the world, my Dear, needing you only. 
Would you be coming if you only knew? 



OLD FRIENDS ARE BEST. 

Old friends are best! 

Old forms, old hearts, old faces 
That haunt the memory of the passing years, 

And seem to dwell among deserted places, 
Reproving us for all our nameless fears. 

Old friends are best! 

The roses softly blowing 
Close by the door, they always seem to say: 

"Old friends are best," altho' we're never knowing 
Where they are farcing at the close of day. 

Old friends are best! 

Somehow the memory clinging 
Brings back the faces that we used to know. 

And in the winter of the heart is ringing 
The songs we loved so many years ago. 

Old friends are best! 
When autumn twilight falling 

Brings respite from the daily toil and care, 
I seem to hear their vibrant voices calling. 
Although I know — I know they are not there. 







HOME. 



Home is where your precious face is always smiling, 
Dear; 
Oh! give me not a palace; I'd rather starve and roam, 
Although the day is weary and the night is dark and 
drear, 
For, without your smile to greet me, it never could 
be home. 

Home is where the hearth is gleaming around your busy 
feet. 
Where four walls are repeating the music of your 
voice; 
And, oh! it's blessed Heaven, when my hurried step 
you greet, 
While your eager kiss of welcome makes my hungry 
heart rejoice. 

Home is where your arms are waiting, open wide to let 
me in; 
Oh! I'd rather be an alien than to have all else but 
this; 
And the big front gates of Heaven open when your 
smiles begin, 
While my cup of joy runs over with the nectar of 
your kiss. 

Home! Ah! what a glorious picture, with you standing 
in the door. 
Sunset skies beneath your lashes, and the twilight in 
your hair; 
Ah! I love you, Sweet, I love you as I never loved be- 
fore, 
And I dream of dear old mother as I see you stand- 
ing there. 

WISDOM. 

God is so wise. He knoweth what is best. 

Though we poor beggars never see the right; 

He knows we ne'er would lean upon His breast 
If He should always give us guiding light. 

He knows that we would never pray to Kim, 
We who are proud, and foolish, and unjust; 

The cup of Life — we'd drink It to the brim; 
The loaf of bread — we'd eat it to the crust — 

Unless He pierced our hearts with some sharp pain. 
And filled our eyes with tears that burn like fire; 

Unless He balanced loss against our gain. 
And measured to us, as our needs require. 







IF YOU KNEW. 

There's a song in my heart that is singing and ringing. 

Ever a song that is happy and true; 
A song that joy to the long day is bringing, 

It's a song which my heart is singing to you; 
Ah! I wonder if you 

Would be singing it, too. 
If you knew — ^if you knew? 

There's a prayer in my heart, my lips are repeating, 
When the rose bends low to the kiss of the dew; 

And the nightingale warbles its beautiful greeting; 
It's a prayer I am saying to Heaven of you. 

In the dusk and the dew. 
Would you pray for me, too, 

If you knew — if you knew? 

There's a place in my arms that will always be waiting, 
A home for your heart, close, close to my breast; 

And I'm wanting you so, for the birds are all mating, 
Oh! why don't you come, and let's mate with the 
rest? 

While the song birds are mating, 
Would you come without waiting 

If you knew — if you knew? 

LIFE'S END. 

The fight is done! 

Please let me quietly lie 
Here, all alone; and rest, 

For I am weary! Do not try 
To waken me. It is not best. 

Leave me alone! 

Deaf to the censure, 
Blind to the cold disdain, 

Which some imfrlendly face 
Might bear. 'Twould cause me pain. 

The fight is o'er! 

I may have failed to learn 
The truer lessons life doth teach 

In my long quest for charity, 
Which always lay beyond my reach. 

I might have been 

A better soldier; might have won 
A cross of glory; held the hand of Fame; 

But I am glad, for many a man 
Has kindly called my name. 



JUST FOR YOU. 

I am waiting for yon, Sweetheart, while the fire-flies 

fill the air; 
I am listening, Dearie, listening, for your footsteps 

everywhere; 
I am waiting while the twilight come a-creeping from 

the west. 
And the night-bird whispers softly to the red rose at 

its breast. 

I have waited, watched and wondered, with a hungry, 

hungry heart. 
And each rustling leaf around me makes my eager 

pulses start; 
I am hungry for your kisses, and your laughing eyes 

of blue. 
Hungry for your arms around me — hungry, hungry, just 

for you. 

I am lonesome, Dearie, lonesome. If you only could but 

know 
How I miss you la the evening, when the lights bom 

dim and low; 
Seems to me you'd be returning to your dollies and 

to me, 
Begging for the "Old Fox" stories as you sit upon my 

knee. 



WHEN YOU COME BACK. 

When you're away — 

I seem to miss you lots of ways 
That I can't tell. The wind that plays 

Among the branches, where the robins sing. 
It seems to say: 

"We miss her, don't we, more than anything?" 

When you're away — 

The clouds get mixed together so, 
With all the sunshine, don't you know? 

And then at night a katy-did 
Outside my window seems to say, 

"It's lonesome, and we miss the kid." 

When you come back — 

We all will say "Hello!" to you; 
The flowers will nod you "Howdy do!" 

The crickets hiding in the grass 
(You cannot see them, 'cause they're black) 

Will greet you gladly as you pass. 



THE RIVER OF CHANCE. 

When my soul goes out on the sea of thought 
To view the wreck which Fate has wrought; 

When I watch the drift on the xbiver of CJiiance, 
The fiddler plays while we dream and dance; 

The curtains rise and the curtains fall, 
But no actor comes to the second call. 

When the day has died and the night is born, 
And the rose leaves fall from the hidden thorn; 

When summer wanes and the leaves, so deep, 
Cover the graves where the dead all sleep; 

Wet eyes look up where pale stars gleam, 
And chill lips pray for an old dead dream. 

Out on the sea of a barren past, 

Lashed, alone, to the broken mast 
Of vain endeavor and wasted years, 

Drinking the brine of their salty tears, 
Until you come, after hope had died, 

And pilot me safe through the rolling tide. 

Though you loved me less, I love you more 

Than I ever loved or felt before. 
And the blood that flows through my veins like fire, 

Feeds the flame of a sweet desire; 
Seeps alive the thoughts that thrill. 

And the wonderful hope time cannot kill. 

You brought to life all the good and true. 
While my heart bows low at the feet of you. 

Who found me deep in dark despair, 
Smiled and lifted me up from there; 

Smiled and made all the wrong seem right, 
'Tin I went, with a song, back into the fight. 

If your love should die, I would love you yet. 
Though my heart would ache with a sad regi-et. 

For a heart that loves as my heart loves you 
Never fails, forgets or proves untrue; 

For I love you more than the most you know. 
And my love shall live though my feet may go 

To the fartherest comer of earth some day; 

And these thankful lips shall always pray 
That Fate may give to your part the best, 

And turn aU pain from your tender breast; 
And if some day God gives me you, 

I will know that Heaven is really true. 



TILL BREAK 0' DAY. 

Trudging along o'er the pathway of life, singing a 

song, 
Hoping and trusting and smiling a bit when things are 

wrong; 
Catching the scent of the fragrant perfume 
Off tne roses that nod as they bloom 
Close by the way, where I'm trudging each day; 
Lonely! perhaps, but humming a song — plodding along. 

Eoses, you know, don't bloom every day; often the sky 
Changes from blue to a dull ashen gray; often we sigh 
When we are weary of bearing the load, 
Toiling along o'er the white dusty road; 
Sometimes it snows, and the winter wind blows; 
But in the gleam of the fire we will dream of spring — 
by and by. 

Often we reach out our hands, just to help someone 

along. 
Over a place that is hilly and rough — stopping our 

song; 
But it is worth all the time that we lost. 
Worth the delay and struggle it cost, 
For just their smile will shorten each mile, 
And the memory will help us along — just like a song. 

Though we may wander with gypsying feet off of the 

way; 
Though we may hunt for the old road again, day after 

day; 
If we will whistle a tune in the night, 
Some wayside inn will gleam glad and bright, 
Shelter and rest, while a star in the west 
Gleams as we smile, in the midst of our dreams, 'till 

break o' day. 



MY DREAM PIPE. 

Deep in the gloaming I sit tonight, 
Watching the firelight gleams 

Dancing around me in wanton flight — 
Smoking my Pipe of Dreams. 

Memories! Ah, how they come and go, 

Woven with threads of gold 
Into the warp of life; and so 
The story of life is told. 

Lonely, I sit tonight, and long 
Just for your voice; it seems 

Like the notes of an olden song — 
Smoking my Pipe of Dreams. 



THE WAITING SEA. 

Let's go down to the sea, my pal, down to the waiting 

sea, 
Where the gray gull cries and the salt spray flies and 

life Is glad and free; 
Let's go down where the great ships drift on an ocean 

of rolling white. 
Where the wet winds shift and the tall spars lift their 

heads to a starless night; 
Let's go down from the murky town, down from its 

vice and sin, 
Down to the joy of **A Ship A-Hoy" and the full tide 

rolling in. 

Let's go down to the endless stretch of seaweed-cov- 
ered shore, 

Down where we feel the slick decks reel as the mad 
waves surge and roar; 

Let's go down where the heart can beat with joy that 
is true and deep, 

Down in the night, where the harbor-light Its pitiless 
watch doth keep; 

Let's ship out through the open gate of the hungrying 
sea which lies 

Free and far, 'neath the evening star, under the sullen 
skies. 

Why should we stay where the weary day ends in a 

sleepless night? 
Stay where the heart is torn apart by the thought of 

a losing fight? 
Why should we stay when the sea nymphs call, and the 

big ships glad to go? 
What do we gain by our toll and pain? What can we 

buy with our woe? 
What do we find of the things we crave? Even the 

drear day dies. 
Let's go down from the sin-cursed town, down where 

the salt spray flies. 

Let's go down where the north wind stings, and the 

black decks reel and groan, 
Where the damp hair clings and the glad heart sings — 

out there with God alone. 
Sever the ties that bind our hearts to the land where 

the days are gray; 
ClOBo our eyes to the smoke-black skies of a place where 

they never pray. 
Let's ship out to the open sea — out where the salt spray 

flies, 
Where the damp hair clings, and the north wind stings, 

under the sullen skies. 



CROSS ROADS. 

Here's to your health, and love, my hoy, 

Though the winds he wildly blowing; 
We're tramping along o'er life's rough road 

And neither the way is knowing; 
We've stuck right close to each other, lad. 

Though the days were often dreary. 
And one ne'er reproached the other one. 

Because the one was weary. 
So, it's luck to you, and it's love to you. 

Though the sun may not he shining; 
And a drink to your health, till we meet, my lad, 

Out, where the woodbine's twining. 

Here's to the day we met, my lad. 

On life's highway of sorrow; 
Together we've tramped through dust and heat, 

With never a thought for the morrow; 
We slept 'neath the stars and drank the health 

Of the moon which hung above us, 
With never a care for the old, cold world. 

Or a sigh for one to love us; 
So, here's to your luck, with a spark in the cup. 

And a cheer for the gloomy weather; 
And a prayer for you, lad, on the dusty road, 

Till we rest in the shade together. 



"GUTE NACHT." 

"Gute nacht, schlafen-sie-wohl! " Oh, life so young 
and tender! 

Sweet infant eyes just freshly filled with light; 
A mother's arms are gently round thee, clinging; 

A mother's lips doth softly say, "Gute Nacht." 

•'Schlafen-sie-wohl," dear heart, that knows no 
sorrow ; 
Sweet baby hands that smooth Care's furrowed 
brow; 
Some day thy feet must o'er life's pathway wander. 
Ah! could these arms but hold you then, as new. 

Some day, my ovm, when you have reached the ending 
Of life's rough way, there, in Death's pale twilight, 

You then will hear a mother's prayer ascending, 

Saying again, my babe, "Schlafen-sie-wohl, Gute 
Nacht!" 



THE TIMBER LINE. 

Beyond the sunset's path of gold upon the river's 
breast, 
Across the sands, where curlews call, in search of 
home and rest; 
Beyond the wharf, beyond the boats that drift upon 
the wave. 
Beyond it all, where stars sink to a coral-coffined 
grave. 

Beyond the town, beyond the wharf, across the muddy 
stream. 
Beyond the noise, the toil and strife, past boats and 
sunset gleam; 
Low, long and black from north to south, where flick- 
ering starlights shine. 
Stretches the boundary of our dreams — the far-oflf 
Timber Line. 

Ah, who can say what lies beyond its twilight-tinted 
rim? 
Or who can know where paths may lead, beyond its 
shadows dim? 
A whisper tells me God is there, at each long day's 
decline, 
And faith will guide my wandering feet, beyond 
the Timber Line. 



A MAN'S A MAN. 

A man's a man, though he may hide 

Within a hut of squalor; 
The rich cannot, though hard they tried. 

Be one small whit the taller. 

Though gold may buy rare silks and lace, 
And fill the house with splendor, 

You'll find much sadness and disgrace 
Go with the legal tender. 

Though some rich fools may wag their heads, 

When a poor beggar passes. 
And then seek rest in eider beds, 

Still, all the same, they're asses. 

God looks upon the naked heart. 

And not on silks and laces; 
So, when He makes men true. He stamps 

His trade-mark on their faces. 



WHEN EVENING COMES. 

When evening comes! 

When fvilight shadows fall, 
And all the world, aweary, seomj to rest. 

When God spreads silence over all; 
'Tis then, Dear Heart, I seem to love you hest — 

For as I sit alone, ray homeing thoughts are free, 
And each one seems a messenger from thee. 

When evening comes! 

When all the load of toil 
Has slipped my shoulders; when the day is done, 

And I am resting from the loud turmoil, 
I do not seem to care whether I lost or won — 

For there seems nothing else that matters much, 
Only just you, and your dear face to touch. 

When evening comes! 

And I can dimly see 
The lights that flicker out across the way; 

When all the pain the day has given me 
Is half forgotten and my memories stray — 

'Tis then I feel that you are somewhere near, 
To soothe, sustain and comfort me, My Dear.. 

When evening comes! 

The night which hath no end; 
When, all aweary, I shall stop to rest, 

When death's deep shadows with life's sunset blend. 
And I shall look my last into the west — 

God give me You; all else the world may keep, 
I want your arms around me when I sleep. 



DRIFTING CLOUDS. 

I miss you so, when summer skies are bending 
Low down to meet the deep blue summer sea. 

And the white clouds, ascending and descending, 
Are like your white arms reaching out for me. 

I sit alone, sweet memories o'er me stealing, 
Like winged fairies from the turquoise skies. 

Hunger again — and always, always longing. 
The skies above, just like your own dear eyes. 

I want you. Dear, the twilight shadows falling 
Bring little comfort when you are not near. 

Through the black night my heart to you is calling. 
And you — I wonder if you do not hear? 



BLACK SHEEP. 

Black Slieep, Black Sheep, where have you strayed? 

Day after day I have waited in vain, 
Night after night I have hungered and prayed; 

Yearning to shelter you once again. 

Often I dream of the long ago, 
When you lisped, on your bended knee, 

Your bed- time prayer. Oh! I loved you so, 
Your big blue eyes looking up at me. 

Long ago! Ah! the truant years 

Pass and leave us with grief untold, 
Cheeks that burn with salty tears. 

Gray hairs mixed with burnished gold. 

Black Sheep, Black Sheep, lonely I wait. 

Asking the Father to lead you home; 
Old and gray, by the garden gate — 

Oh, my Black Sheep! Where do you roam? 

Could I but hold you again tonight, 
A blue-eyed babe, to my aching breast. 

All of life's wrongs would then be right. 
But, Little Black Sheep, God knoweth best. 

OLD-FASHIONED ROSES. 

(Song) 
Often when tired of the toil and the heat, 

Truant, my memory strays 
Like a wild gypsy with wandering feet. 

Back to the summer-time days. 
Back to the hills of the long buried past. 

There where the days were too sweet to last. 

Chorus: 

Old-fashioned roses! Old-fashioned roses! 

Buds that are filled with the sunshine of June: 
Memories of days when life was in tune. 

Leaves that are withered, hopes that are dead, 
Nothing is left but roses so red: 

Old-fashioned roses! 

Often I see, through the grey mist of years, 

The face of a mother I love; 
A face made sweet by the wash of life's tears, 

As pure as the heavens above: 
I see her, again, as I used to of yore, 

Where the truant red roses climbed over the door. 



THE HEART THAT DIED. 

Sometimes, sweetheart, when in the future years 
The love and trust of other hearts are thine, 

When sunny smiles shall take the place of tears, 
And you shall lean to other arms than mine. 

When fortune comes and kneels close by your side, 
Will you forget the heart that starved and died? 

When, 'neath the arch of soft blue summer skies, 
Your cheeks are rosy with the wine of life, 

And your dear eyes grow dim with tender li^ht, 
Smiling upon a hearthstone free from strife, 

Will you remember, in the dusk and dew, 
That, somewhere, I am lonely, just for you? 

Will you remember, dear, or will you strive 

To cover memory with f orgetfulness. 
Though parted by the weary stretch of years? 

If you remember, will you love me less? 
Though Fate is cruel and we walk apart. 

Will memory hold me, always, in your heart? 

SHIPS THAT PASS. 

We met when life was at its noon, 

One day in the summer weather; 
Strange, our paths so wide apart. 

Should ever come together; 
Strange, that out on the ocean of time. 

Our ships should pass in this simny clime. 

You who tasted of Life's full cup, 

A little of joy and sorrow; 
With never a thought for what fate held. 

Never a dream of the morrow — 
Both with the yearning we never know. 

Only when Fate has cheated us so. 

Me with a touch of the life that clings 

Close, like the old gray mosses, 
Looking ahead where the daylight ends. 

And a white sail dips and crosses; 
You, hungry for the joy that deep love brings; 

I, for a dear mouth that kisses and clings. 

L Envoi: 

Soon our ships must pass and part. 

Where the soft twilight is dying. 
Each with a pain in each closed heart, 

While the white sea gulls are cTjing. 



VISIONS. 

I wusht I "WTis a grate big man, 

1st like my pa, you see; 
En not a boy en have to drink 

A lot uv syrup en tea. 

I wusht thet I could alius go 
En wurk down town, like dad. 

En have a little boy at home 
To spank when he 'us bad, 

I have my clo's all pressed, you know, 

Down to the pressin' shop; 
En 'nen when grocery bills come in, 

I'd say, "It's got to stop." 

Thet's what I'd say, rite to my wife. 
But wouldn't mean it, though; 

En 'nen I'd pull a roll uv bills, 
En pay 'em up, you know. 

It must be grate to be a man, 
En go out wif "The Boys;" 

Instead uv bein' just a kid, 
A playin' wif your toys. 



WHERE THE RED ROSE SWINGS. 



When we tire of the struggle that's weary and long. 

Of the days full of hunger and blight, 
When we try hard to smile o'er a half broken song, 

Then pray for the comfort of night. 

With its calm and the balm of the breezes that blow, 

From the wonderful isles of the west; 
And the fragrant perfume of the roses that grow, 

Where the nightingale watches her nest. 

There is sorrow that comes with the flight of our 
dreams. 
As we watch for our ships to return; 
But the wine of our dreams turns to wormwood, it 
seems, 
While hope on the altar doth bum. 

But we wait by the gate, where the red roses swing, 

Or close by the firelight's bright glow, 
For the bliss of a kiss which the years used to bring. 

And a joy which youth used to know. 



THE DESERT'S EDGE. 

Listen, my Love, how oft do I wander 

Here through the sands that shimmer with heat, 
Watching the red sun dropping out yonder. 

Sands like live coals, scorching the feet; 
Down to its rest, 

In the desert's hot breast — 
And I am alone! 

Often I dream, in the gray dawn of morning, 
Dream you are sleeping, close by my side. 

But I waken with strange restless warning; 
Waken to find that the vision has died — 

Waken again 

To hunger and pain — 

For I am alone! 

Often I feel the touch of your fingers 
Here on my face, like the kiss of the wind, 

The breath from your lips Like perfume that lingers, 
Lingers to torture with memories unkind. 

The wild jackals whine, 
The desert stars shine — 

And I am alone! 

Listen, oh Love, sometime while we're sleeping, 
Death will close our eyes once for all; 

Whether we're laughing, or whether we're weeping, 
Whether Life's cup is nectar or galL — 

I ask for the bliss, 

To dream that your kiss 

Fastens them down, 

WHAT'S THE USE OF SIGHING. 

What's the use of sighing when the world looks blue? 

What's the use of crying if the moon don't drop 
for you? 
What's the use of complaining. 

Even if it's raining? 
Somewhere there are roses smiling through the dew. 

What's the use of finding fault with everything? 

Harsh words are remembered by the pain they bring. 
Clouds may still be drifting, 

But they'll soon be shifting, 
And the swaying robin will begin to sing. 

What's the use of growing old and worn and gray? 

Life is but the passing of a fleeting day. 
Love and Youth together, 

Through the stormy weather. 
Never slip the tether in life's golden May. 



THE HARBOR LIGHTS. 

I have often dreamed of a summer sea 

Where a snow-white sea gull dips, 
Where anchors lie, and white sails fly, 

Stretched taut to the straining ships. 
I have often dreamed of a guiding star, 

As I slipped through the curling foam, 
With a hungry heart for the harbor-bar 

And the glimmering lights o' home — 
The lights o' home, and the wild glad joy 

Of your arms, as you whisper, "I love you, boy." 

I h?ve often dreamed of a stormy sea, 

And the hell of a stormy night; 
With the sullen roar on the distant shore. 

And the gleam of the harbor light, 
As I fought the teeth of the howling gale. 

And the clutch of the angry sea; 
Till my ship slipped in, again, to find 

Your lips to welcome me — 
Your rose-red lips, and the lingering touch 

Of those beautiful hands I love so much. 

L: Envoi! 

I dream of the sea and I dream of home. 

And the wine of your rose-red lips; 
And my heart grows hungry — as far a roam — 

For the touch of your finger tips. 



DUTY. 

We struggle on, and blindly try to tie 

The broken threads of each unfinished day; 

Forcing a smile, though everything goes wrong. 
And in the darkness humbly try to pray. 

We drop the curtain on each taken task. 
Just rest, and twilight — this is all we ask. 

Each roseate dawn of every perfect morn 

Brings hopes and joys which never come to pass, 

So, in the grayness of each sunset hour. 
We smile again and drain the half-filled glass. 

Perchance the draught was sweet with morning's dew, 
But at the twilight, it is filled with rue. 

God make us brave and steel our hearts to bear 
Each thrust of sorrow, be it right or wrong. 

For if we wait, we know, some time, somewhere, 
The whole of life will end in perfect song. 

We know that somewhere, out beyond life's gates, 
Is peace forever, and the Master waits! 



A FLOWER FOR FATHER. 

(Dedicated to Father's Day.) 
The bards have written verses of our mothers, old and 
gray, 
Who sadly watched and waited, in a cottage far 
away; 
But we hear no praises ringing for the dear old Dad 
we knew, 
In life's glorious sun-kissed morning, when skies 
were bright and blue. 

There's a father who has loved you, maybe, better 
than you know, 
Who has toiled and struggled for you, till his steps 
are weak and slow; 
All the best which hope has promised, all the glory 
and the pain. 
Fades with life's effulgent sunset, and he dreams of 
youth again. 

You may still, with joy, remember dear old mother's 
fond caress, 
She whose arms were always open, she whose lips 
spoke but to bless; 
But, boys, don't forget your father, though his hands 
were big and rough. 
For the best he always gave you, and he thought it 
not enough. 

Wear a flower for your Father as you do for Mother, 
dear; 
For he loves you where you wander, though his 
prayers you do not hear; 
On his brow, once fair and handsome, snows of Time 
are drifting fast, 
And, remember, boys, you'll miss him, when he's 
crossed the Bar at last. 



THE DAY AFTER CHRISTMAS. 

'Twas tlie day after Christmas, and all through the 
house 

There wasn't room for a thing, not even a mouse. 
The floor was a wreck of toys, it was plain, 

Piled up, like men on the field of the slain. 
There were toy pistols, skyrockets, and a torpedo hoat 

With a smokestack of yellow and drawn by a goat; 
A train with its load of lions, tigers and things. 

And a hundred more trinkets which Santa Claus 
brings. 

A doll with her head crushed under a train. 

But a smile on her face showed she died wlthoat 
pain; 
An automobile with wheels painted green 

Had collided, head-end, with a flying machine; 
A gilded fire engine had run into a hack, 

And the cabby and fireman each lay prone on his 
back. 
There were books sadly torn, a gun badly broke, 

And of firecrackers, nothing was left but the smoke. 

L' Envoi — 

The wreck was complete, but, oh, the wild Joy 
Of a battle like this, in the life of a boy. 



THE DREAM THAT KEEPS. 

Some day, Dear Heart, you'll miss me; 

Some day you'll yearn to lie 
Close in my arms and kiss me; 

A kiss, a smile, a sigh. 
Some day you'll sigh to stray, I know, 

Back where you left me, long ago. 

Some day you will be dreaming 

With heart that ever weeps; 
The day will not return, Dear, 

It's just the dream that keeps. 
Our empty arms reach out to hold 

'Till eyes are dim, and hands are old. 

One day, why did you say. Dear, 

The things that hurt me so? 
With faith you should have filled it 

Before you let it go. 
You should have held me, Dear, that's all — 

The day is gone beyond recall. 







THE OLD AND THE NEW. 

Ah! The Old Year, leave it, softly, as we leave the 

sileKt: Dead, 
With the altar candles burning at the foot and at the 

head; 
Leave behind us all the sorrow that the hungry years 

havo known. 
Leave the harvest of our failures, that our wayward 

hands have sown; 
Let us smile with mute thanksgiving, though our wan- 
dering feet have strayed 
To the devious paths of folly, and we learned the 

Devil 'g trade. 
For the God who gave us being, showed his mercy 

year by year, 
And the dark by-paths before us are the ones that we 

should fear. 

And the New Year, greet it gently, as you would a 

child new-born. 
For the beacon-light of Heaven greets the birth of 

every morn; 
Out before us lies the future, with its mysteries 

untold, 
And each day must show our footprints, 'ere the sun- 
set turns to gold. 
Let us take the path of duty, with a laugh upon our 

lips, 
Let us smile upon our comrades as we launch our 

straining ships; 
For the God who gave us being, brings the ebbing of 

tho tide, 
And the voice of Life sings sweetly to the heart that's 

satisfied. 



g ' ^"' > -J P !" 



cay 




THE LOG OF THE DeSOTO. 

It was a jolly lot C tars who grandly sailed away 
Aboard the ship DeSoto one balmy summer day, 

Out o'er the yellow waters of the Gulf of Mexico, 
A black flag whipping in the breeze, the sails spread 
taut and low. 

Oh, let the south winds blow, my lads! 
Ahoy! Heave ho, heave ho! 

Big Captain Mike, as brave a man as ever took a wheel, 
And a crew of sturdy seamen with sinews made of 
steel; 
Our anchors raised and swinging, clean decks from 
stem to stern. 
We watched the land receding, where the white 
lights love to bum. 
Oh, let the lights bum bright tonight. 
Heave ho, my lads, heave ho! 

Around the cabin table, with pipe and mug and ale, 
We jolly tars would gather, when night winds fiUed 
the sail. 
And many a weird battle was fought again, with pride. 
While moonbeams spread their silvery light across 
the swelling tide. 
A dream, again, of love and war. 
Heave ho, my lads, heave ho! 

And as the good ship drifted, with sails like sea gulls 
white. 
We dreamed of home and loved ones beneath the 
pale starlight, 
And many a strong lip quivered with many a still-bora 
sigh, 
And many a heart beat fast again, to hear the battle 
cry. 
Oh, back again, where lights are white. 
Ahoy! Heave ho, heave ho! 



AWEARY. 

I am so tired! My Dear, please let me lay 
My aching head, a moment, on your breast; 

Just as a child, aweary of its play. 
Comes to its mother, hungering for rest. 

Put your dear arms around me, let me feel 
Your precious fingers stealing through my hair; 

Life is so hard, sometimes, hard and unreal; 
And the world is lonely if you are not there. 

The day is done! Sweet memories come to me. 

The birds have gone to rest, the shadows gray 
Fall like a kindly mantle, and I see 

The golden glory of the dying day. 

Yes, I am tired, and you are all I crave. 

Just let me look into your eyes of blue. 
Stoop down and let me kiss you. Heaven gave 

Me all I've prayed for — when It gave me Yon. 

Let me be still, close to your beating heart. 
Dumb with my gladness; let my eager hands 

Steal o'er your face and neck — Love's gentle art — 
And feel you tremble at dear love's demands. 

Yes, kiss me. Dearest; let your moist lips cling 
Close to my own, in silent wordless bliss. 

It is your love that makes my tired heart sing; 
There is no life. Sweetheart, but You and this. 



DUSK. 

The tinkling bells within the distant fold. 
The paling west, the dusk and falling dew; 

The growing darkness o'er the crimson sky, 
The hush of night, the P.oses and the Rue. 

God over all — The mystery of life, 
The folding pages of the book on high; 

The waving grain within the twilight deep. 
The moss-grown elms where gentle breezes sigh. 

The vibrant stillness of the twilight hour; 

The creeping shadows and the faint Curfew; 
Tired arms, and burning eyes, and hungry heart; 

Silence and night, and you. Dear Heart, just you. 
hands, as in the soft twilight dear, eager lips from other 



IRISH BABY DAY. 

Begorry! Mlz Mahoney an pliat is this ye say? 

We're goin to hev a circus called Irish Bahy Day? 
The young wans, an the auld wans, the fat wans an the 
lean; 
The He wans, and the She wans a wearin av the 
green; 
All dressed up fit fer kiUin in their frills an furbelows, 
Scrubbed and rubbed until their cheeks air red as 
any rose; 
An phat will dear auld Patrick be'ya thinkin, when I 
say 
"Hurrah! fer Dear Auld Ireland an Irish Baby 
Day." 

There's little Tim OTlannery an little Nan O'Shea, 
The darlint little orphants whose dads was lost at 
sea; 
There's little Mag O'Malley the joy av Harlem Flat, 
With eyes as blue as summer skies — an who niver 
wore a hat; 
There's big Boss Bill O'Brien an his yeller headed crew, 

An O' Grady with his outfit as thick as Irish stew; 
An there's poor auld missus Murphy with a dozen 
more — Oh say, 
Its hurrah! fer Dear Auld Ireland an Irish baby day. 

Its a long way back to Ireland where the blissed sham- 
rocks grow, 
Its a rocky road to Dublin ; ; an I niver spect to go 
Where my dear auld mither's schlapin beneath the 
Irish sod, 
An they're callin av It Hiven jest because its close 
to God; 
Its a long way to Killamey where hearts are tried 
an true, 
Where angels pin the skies back just to let the 
sunshine through, 
But we'll crush the voice av sorrow, an we'll wipe the 
tears away, 
An give three cheers for Ireland and Irish Baby Day. 

A TOAST. 

Some laugh, and drink from the flowing bowl, 

But soon or late they must pay the toll; 
Some steep their brain in the sparkling wine, 

But the vintage of Love for mine, for mine. 
Ah! give me the chalice of ruby lips, 

Which maddens the soul with the nectar that drips 
From its rosebud rim. Ah! this is the best 

Of life, and the world may have the rest. 



YOUR ROLLIGKINCJ EYES. 

I wonder, sometimes, as I look into 

Yoiir beautiful rouguish eyes, 
If the story they're telling is really true, 

Or if they are telling lies? 
So I close my own and dream, Ma-chere, 

That the story is sweet and true. 
And, oh, it seems that the joy of my dreams 

Must surely he thrilling you. 
And again to the land of dreams I stray. 

As I hear you laugh in your roliickiiig way. 

The way is long, and the road is rough, 

To the ir.ystical land of hope, 
And hearts oft ache as the road we take, 

While we hungrily, blindly grope 
In the silent dark, for the friendly clasp 

Of a hand that is warm and true; 
And the red rose sleeps in the arms of night, 

As lips take their cup of rue; 
But still I see, as the gray day dies, 

The sunshine that lurks in your beautiful eyes. 

Oh, you haunt me so, as the days slip by, 

Each freighted with hopes anew, 
And the best of me seems the part that's free 

To wander in dreams with you; 
Perhaps you forget, as each day dies. 

The things you have said to me; 
But your laugh still rings o'er my heart's taut strings, 

As the blue of your "eyes I see; 
And oh, can't you guess how I miss your touch. 

And the joy of your laugh that I love so much? 



THE HEIGHTS OF LOVE. 

"What strive you for?" a plodding pilgrim asked 
Of him who traveled onward by his side; 

"For yonder heights where all God's glory lies; 
For Heaven I strive," the other one replied. 

"What strive you for?" the pilgrim asked again 
Of one who sat beside the road alone. 

"I strive for wealth and honor," he replied; 
"Ah! that I might for wasted years atone." 

And then said he, who had these questions asked: 
"Oh, weary hearts on which life's shadows fall 

So dark and deep; if you had only striven 
For Love alone you would have known it all." 






r'THE mt: 




LOVE'S SEASONS. 

The Spring-time of love Is a wonderful time, 
With its promise of hope so new; 

Laughter and kisses, and star-lit nights, 
'Neath roses and falling dew; 

Love hath a Spring-time, but, ah, who knows 
How many heartaches are in the rose? 

The Summer of love Is a wonderful time, 
With its passion so wild and deep, 

*Neath the burning glow of the summer skies, 
And the vows our hearts must keep; 

Love hath a Summer — but who can guess 
All of the hunger and loneliness? 

The Autumn of love is a wonderful time, 

With its harvest of ripened bliss. 
The golden desert of waving fields, 

The wine of a ripened kiss; 
Love hath an Autumn — but 'neath its skies 

Maybe sorrow and sadness lies. 

The Winter of love is a wonderful time, 
'Tis the end of the heart's desire. 

And love is safe from the biting blasts 
In the glow of an open fire; 

Love hath its winter — but, ah, who cares 
If Love's hand caresses our whitening hairs? 



WE DO NOT CARE. 

We do not care what the world may say, 

If those whom we love are true; 
We do not mind the toil of the day. 

If we know in the dusk and dew 
Some one is waiting to welcome us — 

A home where the heart can rest — 
Some one who whispers, "Dear Heart, I know 

That today you have done your best." 

For the heart don't care what the world may say, 

If those whom it loves are tnie; 
For it is ever, and always, the heart's own way, 

Too long for the love and rue. 
We forget the gain, or the loss, and its pain. 

That tortures our aching breast, 
If there's one to whisper, in sweet blind faith, 

"I know you have done your best." 



THE mt 




FSOM THE STARS TO YOU. 

"Somewliere beneath the stars there is something that 
you alone were meant to do. Never rest until you have 
found out what it is!" 

— John Brashear, in American Magazine. 
Beneath the stars that are always gleaming, 

Under the skies that are ever blue; 
Long days of toil, or nights of dreaming, 

There is ever something for us to do; 
There is never a day but is ever teaching 

A silent lesson, for good or bad; 
Always a heart-throb ever reaching 

Somewhere a heart that is grieving or glad.. 

Somewhere beneath all the silent glory 

Of each golden day, or star-lit night, 
It is ever and ever the same old story — 

Always a battle which we must fight; 
Always a breast that is numb with aching, 

Ever a tear we must wipe away; 
Somewhere a heart that is starved and breaking, 

Always a debt that is ours to pay. 

Maybe today, or maybe tomorrow. 

Maybe in months, or maybe in years, 
Something will call us — Woe, want or sorrow; 

Hearts that are burdened, eyes dimmed by tears — 
But just as sure as the rain, and its falling, 

And just as sure as the day follows night, 
Sometime a voice unto us will be calling, 

Sometime a battle which our souls must fight. 

Though we grow footsore, heartsick and weary. 

Praying in vain for the balm of the night; 
Though days are long days lonely and dreary, 

There Is a battle which our souls must fight — 
Somewhere beneath the stars that are ?:!earalng, 

Somewhere beneath the heavens of blue. 
Waste not the days in planning and dreaming, 

There is a task which our hands must do. 



THE LITTLE STONE DOG. 

Your little stone dog sits up on the shelf, 

All tied with a woolen string; 
A faraway look on his dirty pug face, 

Tho' he answers me never a thing. 
I whistle and coax hut he doesn't come down, 

And his tail doesn't wag when I call. 
I wonder whose voice he is waiting to hear, 

And a pat on the head, after all? 

Your little worn shoes lie under the bed, 

Your rocking-chair sits by the door; 
Your dolly, with hair so tanc^led and red. 

Has fallen asleep on the floor; 
A little white nightie hangs on its nail, 

Where you put it for mother, each day; 
The clock has stopped, "because it is tired 

Of ticking while you are away. 

I miss you, I miss you! and sometimes I hear 

Your pit-a-pat footsteps again. 
Ah! if I might take you once more on my knee, 

I'd forget all the sorrow and pain 
Of the years that have passed, with memories dear, 

Of the days with their bloom and their b'ir^ht, 
If my arms could but hold you, my ears only hear 

You whisper, "Dear Daddy, good night." 



WHEN THE FIRELIGHT DIES. 

When the light dies out of the western sky, 

And the cool night breeze through the branches sigh, 

The fireflies dance o'er the silent bay, 

And the sea gulls dip in the offing spray. 

'Tls then, sometimes, that I seom to I on 5 
For the nameless thrUl of an old dead song, 
And my tired eyes burn with the tears thpy hold. 
While the white clouds change to hills of gold. 

It is then my arms reach out in vain. 
Hungry to hold you close again, 
While a prayer lies, dumb, on my lips at last. 
And my eyes turn back to the long-lost past. 

But the sunset fades, and the night winds croon, 
And the best of life is gone, too soon; 
The heart grows old, as the firelight dies, 
While the red glow fades from the western skies. 




THE LITTLE WHITE HEARSE, 

You would ask of Mm if the way seemed long, 

Ob, heart, that doth miss iiirn so! 
You weep as you croon his bedtime song — 

To him who was called to go. 
You beg him to say if his heart grew sad, 

If his feet got weary and sore; 
But the still, cold lips of the little lad 

Will answer you never more. 

You plead, "We miss you so, little boy;" 
"Oh! why did you leave us now?" 
But he answers not from the land of joy 

As deep 'neath your grief you bow. 
He goeth far, for the way is long. 

And your prayers cannot call him back. 
And your soul chokes up with a broken song, 

As you follow the little white hack. 

You say, "No matter where death may lead, 

No matter where feet may stray, 
Tho' eyes are dim and hearts doth bleed. 

We'll follow you all the way." 
Ah, yes, 'tis true! You will follow the way, 

Like sheep that go over the hill — 
For are we not all the Master's sheep, 

To follow where'er He will? 

And, though the time may be long and dim, 

Or maybe so short and soon; 
But soon or late, you will foUow him 

Out 'neath the still, white moon; 
Out o'er the way his little feet went, 

Into the great grey west. 
But until then we must be content — 

For the Fatlier He knoweth best. 



HEART 0' MINE. 

What do you say, oh, heart o' mine? 

The world is begging the sun to shine, 
The road is short to the break o' day, 

And Its miles and miles out the other way; 
Let's go, let's go, where the fields are wide. 

With nothing but God on the other side — 
Come on, my heart, let's go. 

Oh! heart o' mine, you wakened me, 
Longing, you said, to be far and free, 

Far away from the smoky town, 

Tree of the burdens that hold us down; 

Out where the sunset gates, ajar, 
Open to us 'neath the evening star — 

I'm ready, oh, heart o' mine. 

Beady to take up my waiting pack, 
Ready to go and never come back, 

Ready to hunt for the gates that stand 
Ajar, at the entrance to No-Man's Land, 

There where nothing can stop your song, 
And life's too short, tho' a whole life long,- 

I'm waiting, oh, heart o' mine. 

It's a winding road, so the sages say. 

To sundown land, from the break o' day, 

And the half-way house lies just behind, 
I wait, and so if you would be kind 

Wake up, and let's be jogging on, 

For it won't be long till the day is gone — 

Wake up, oh, heart o' mine. 

Wake up! wake up! ere the sun has shone. 
For you know I can't go out alone. 

The fields are calling— I hear them say, 

"Come on, come on; It's a great old day." 
God \vaits out, there, and God is kind. 

With nothing but footsteps to leave behind- 
Let 's go, oh, heart o' mine. 



SOMEWHERE A MOTHER PRAYS. 

The very dearest picture that memory paints for me, 
Is a picture of my boyhood in the golden days of 
yore; 
And through the mist of drifting years a cottage I can 
see, 
With my dear, old, sainted mother a-standing in the 
door. 

The years have left their footprints on the furrowed 
cheek of Time, 
The days of youth have vanished, and the burden 
hard to bear; 
But G-od sent down some angels to this world of sin 
and crime, 
And one of them was mother, with the sunshine in 
her hair. 

My memory seems to picture her just as I loved her so, 
She was very fair and lovely, like a lily wet with 
dew; 
Her cheeks like summer roses where south winds al- 
ways blow, 
And the light of love and mercy in her eyes so deep 
and blue. 

And always close beside me, no matter where I roam, 
I can feel her hovering presence to help me rise and 
fight; 
While often, in my dreaming, I can see the dear old 
home. 
And hear her sweetly singing to the listening ear of 
night. 

If my faith in men should fail me, and my creed 
should be a snare, 
If the hope of Heaven should mock me, and friends 
should prove untrue; 
I know — thank God! — that somewhere, I shall have my 
mother's prayer, 
And that tears of love and longing often dim those 
eyes of blue. 



MY ROSE OF OLD KILLARNEY. 

oil, I get a glimpse o' Heaven lookln' in your eyes of 
blue, 
For it's only you I'm lovln', and I hope your love Is 
true; 
If the angels ever find you, they will take you back, 
I know, 
From the sunny land of Ireland where the four-leaf 
clovers groTT, 
All the brightest golden sunshine God has woven in 
your hair, 
With the first blush of the morning He has touched 
your cheeks so rare; 
All the azure of the ocean, all the blue of summer 
skies, 
He has mixed with rippling laughter and has poured 
it in your eyes. 

He has taken all the sweetness, which the truant wild 
bee sips, 
From the roses of Killamey, and has spread it on 
your lips; 
He has stolen all the music from the brooklets, as 
they flow, 
Mixed it with the angels' voices for your laughter, 
sweet and low. 
Then He crossed our winding pathways, that had been 
so far apart, 
Until now, you are an angel in the Heaven of my 
heart. 
So be kind, and love me. Lassie, for it's you I love — 
just you; 
And it's Heaven I am seein' lookln' in those eyes 
o' blue. 

Often, when I'm tired o' toilin', and I sit me down 
to rest, 
It is then my heart is yearnin' for the one I love 
the best; 
When my soul is sick with waitin', and my eyes are 
dim with tears. 
And, in memory, I wander back through all the 
empty years. 
Searching all the wlndin' by-ways, lookln', callln' for 
you, Dear, 
Eeachin' out my arms to take you, wondering if you 
do not hear; 
Wantln' you, my Irish Lassie, while the stars gleam 
in the west, 
And the nightingale's complaining to the black- 
thorn at its bresEt. 



A CHRISTMAS PRAYER. 

My pal and me are wishing that Old Santa in his fllglit. 
Finds every little boy and girl on this dear Christmas 

night; 
"We hope He stuffs ea<:h stocking till it can hold no 

more; 
And then keep on a stuffin' till it spills down on 

the Soor. 

My pal believes in Santa Clans and Cliristmas, like 
I do. 
And though I'm not a kid, like pal, I certainly trust 
Him, too; 
For what's the use of living if our childhood faith is 
lost? 
So keep your faith in Santa Claus no matter what 
it cost 

I miss my pal so much, you know, 'cause he has gone 

away, 

And every night I'm lonely and lonely every day; 

And every mom I'm listening to hear him lor.dly call, 

"Wake up! Wake up, old fellow! You're not awake 

at all!" 

So I am writing for Kirn, to let yoa kiddies see 
That we are prajring for you, my dear, old pal and 
me; 
A prayer that Cliristmas morning brings loads and 
loads of joy, 
To every hungry little heart, of every girl and boy. 



THE BONDS OF LOVE. 

Just an humble Little cottage, 

With the vines upon the wall; 
Just a nest among the shadows 

Of the oak trees — that is all. 
Just a bright light in the window. 

So my feet may never roam, 
Just a little wayside cottage. 

But it's sweet — for it is Home! 

Just an angel in this cottage, 

With a pair of deep blue eyes: 
And her hair like silver moonbeams. 

When the summer daylight dies; 
Just a love there, true and tender. 

So my heart will never ream: 
Just a pair of dear arms waiting, 

And within them is my Home. 



SWEETHEARTS. 

Sometimes, I think, when I am tired an' hot an' dirty, 

too, 
That mothers are the hestest things in all the wurld, 

don't you? 
My mother says, "You had, had boy; you are an awful 

sight," 
En' frowns, en' 'nen she sorter smiles en' hugs me 

right up tight. 

She says the old, old rag-man will get me sure some 
day 
If I just tear my clo's so bad when I am out at play; 
An' asks me if I think that she was made to patch an' 
sew, 
An' who will do it fer me 'nen, when she is gone, 
you know? 

'Nen when she says such things as this my froat ist 
hurts inside, 
Ist like I swallered simipin' big — an' don't stop 
'tiU I've cried; 
The ole house gets so lonesome, too, when mother goes 
to call. 
An' if she didn't come hack — why, I wouldn't stay, 
that's aU! 

I think 'at God is mighty good to give us mothers who 
Can do a lot uv things for us, 'at a ole man can't do, 

'Nen when I get to be growed up I shore am goin' 
to be 
Sweethearts wlf my mother if she will be wif me. 

THE BEND IN THE ROAD. 

Long years ago, sweetheart of mine. 

We wandered through the wood. 
Where lingering shadows crossed our path, 

And life was glad and good; 
I boldly stole a kiss, which made 
You blush and cry — and, then, 
You, laughing, ran from me, and said: 

"I'U wait around the bend." 

'Twas where the old worn wagon road 

Turned 'round the sloping hill, 
I found you waiting there for me, 

Methinks I see you still; 
And tho' you've gone and left me here. 

Where twilight shadows blend. 
My faith speaks softly in my ear, 

"She's waiting round the bend." 



H 46 78 .^ 



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